Chemistry & Biology
Volume 18, Issue 8, 26 August 2011, Pages 966-975
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Article
A General Framework for Inhibitor Resistance in Protein Kinases

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Summary

Protein kinases control virtually every aspect of normal and pathological cell physiology and are considered ideal targets for drug discovery. Most kinase inhibitors target the ATP binding site and interact with residue of a hinge loop connecting the small and large lobes of the kinase scaffold. Resistance to kinase inhibitors emerges during clinical treatment or as a result of in vitro selection approaches. Mutations conferring resistance to ATP site inhibitors often affect residues that line the ATP binding site and therefore contribute to selective inhibitor binding. Here, we show that mutations at two specific positions in the hinge loop, distinct from the previously characterized “gatekeeper,” have general adverse effects on inhibitor sensitivity in six distantly related kinases, usually without consequences on kinase activity. Our results uncover a unifying mechanism of inhibitor resistance of protein kinases that might have widespread significance for drug target validation and clinical practice.

Highlights

► Mutations in the hinge loop of the kinase scaffold confer ATP site inhibitor resistance ► Resistance to ATP site inhibitors can be created without prior structural knowledge or complex screens ► The method can be used to generate inhibitor-resistant kinases for the purpose of target validation

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Present address: Structural Biology and Biocomputing Programme, Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), c/Melchor Fdez. Almagro 3, 28029 Madrid, Spain